Tina Lepagetlepage@lepageassociates.com (919) 572-0000 http://www.lepageassociates.com/html/tina.html Dr. Tina Lepage is the founder of Lepage Associates. She is a specialist in: personal and professional relationship issues; children, adolescents, and families; psychological, educational, and forensic evaluations; and personal growth pursuits. She holds a Doctorate and Masters in clinical psychology and a Bachelor of Science in child development & family relationships, as well as a Master's in management, and is a Licensed Psychologist.
Speakers
Dean Blackburn, Assistant Dean of Students, UNC blackbrn@email.unc.edu (919) 966 4042
UNC Dean of Student Office : http://deanofstudents.unc.edu/index.php/for-faculty-topmenu-77.html The Office of the Dean of Students works to educate the entire University community, including faculty and staff, about relevant policies and ways of responding to student-related matters, and serves as an initial point of reference for students who have concerns about issues concerning their campus experience. Through a wide variety of educational programs, the supervision of campus functions such as the Office of Fraternity and Sorority Life and the Student Judicial System, and enforcement of University policies such as the Policy on Prohibited Harassment and Discrimination and the Student Alcohol Policy, we promote a positive learning environment in which all students may achieve their full academic and personal potential
Head Coach Anson Dorrance is now in his 30th season as the Tar Heel head coach. His teams have an all-time record of 648-32-19 (.941). Under Dorrance, UNC has won 19 national championships, including 18 NCAA crowns and one AIAW title, 18 regular-season ACC titles and 18 ACC Tournament championships. During his tenure, Dorrance's teams are 123-7-3 in ACC regular-season games, 51-0-3 in ACC Tournament matches and 94-7-1 in NCAA Tournament games
PANEL MEMBERS UNDER CONSIDERATION
Recommendations:
Ellen Gooding, CA Counselor--Wendy Mogel author of The Blessings of a Skinned Knee (This author spoke to a sold out crowd in Seattle a couple of years ago, her fee then was $20K) May be a good book to have available that evening though. Wendy Mogelhttp://www.wendymogel.com/schedule/item/seattle_wa/ Speaking in Seattle again--Keynote, tickets are $25-30. Let me know if you want me to continue to follow up-assume she's too expensive for a panel member. RB
Don Berger and Laura Sellers, CA Head and CA College Counselor--Duke's Dean Sue Wasiolek--co author of book "Getting the Most out of College" http://deanofstudents.studentaffairs.duke.edu/our_staff/profiles/sue.html Dean Sue is doesn't have a psychology, child development background--she would fit better into the role Dean Blackburn is already filling, IMO. RB
Mitch McGuigan, CA US Head, Dr. Rob Evans--psychologist/author who has spoke at CA approximately 7 years ago http://www.ncais.org/event_info/Rob%20Evans%20Bio.pdf 4/8/09 Checked out his website, he has a conflict for October 27th, RB
Dr. David Elkind, Tufts Unversity, Professor Emeritus, Child Development http://ase.tufts.edu/faculty-guide/fac/delkind.childdev.htm, quoted extensively in Psychology Today article "A Nation of Wimps" 4/8/09 His background is excellent on this topic. He is available on the 27th, $2500, amount includes travel and expenses.
Dr. Karen C Wells, Duke University, Director Family Studies Clinic
Clinical Interests:Marital therapy, couples therapy, general family therapy, family therapy for parent-adolescent problems, parent training for parents of children with disruptive behavior disorders. http://www.dukehealth.org/physicians/0542B2EB1FFD4A6B85256DFD006A90DE
Dr. John Looney (MD), Duke University, Former chair of the Division of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, now in private practice in Cary. : Assessment and treatment of emotional disorders in childDr. Looney has also developed an innovative approach to dealing with the problem of binge drinking by college students. He leads teams of consultants to campuses to design methods of institutional cultural shift from laissez faire administration of student affairs to more active involvement in student life by college and university faculty and administrators. Dr. Looney's work with colleges and universities is supported by a permanent endowment from the Cotswold Foundation of Philadelphia, PA.ren, adolescents and their families. Family therapy and guidance of parents. Evaluation and treatment of substance abuse in adolescents and young adults. Psychotherapy and consultation to college students.Consultation: Organizational consultation with regard to building clinical systems. Consultation to secondary schools and colleges regarding methods ofreducing excessive use of alcohol and other drugs and managing student mental health issues. Limited consultation to legal professionals.http://psychiatry.mc.duke.edu/Faculty/JLooney.html (asked Tina if she had a contact with him 4/11)
Dr. Richard Weissbourd, Harvard lecturer on Education http://www.gse.harvard.edu/faculty_research/profiles/profile.shtml?vperson_id=197New book out THE PARENTS WE MEAN TO From Publishers Weekly
Harvard psychologist Weissbourd (The Vulnerable Child) delivers a direct, digestible wakeup call about the need for better moral instruction for children. Enlisting a battery of researchers to conduct interviews with students, teachers and parents mostly in the Boston area and the South, Weissbourd asserts quite forcefully and repetitively that by abdicating moral authority to popular culture and children's peers, by shielding children from their destructive behavior, by letting fathers off the hook and by insisting on children's happiness rather than their goodness, adults are failing their own children. Weissbourd looks at the role of shame in engendering children's destructive acts, and how it can result from parents' excessive expectations and fears of their children's emotions. Promoting an elusive notion of happiness sacrifices important lessons in empathy, appreciation and caring, while parents' self-interest continually erodes the basis for community. The author advocates checking parents' overweening drive for achievement in our children, refraining from wanting to be their best friend and cultivating a healthy idealism. He cites a woeful lack of self-awareness by parents and the need for building alliances with teachers and other parents. His chapter on the morally mature sports parent is a sober reminder of why we want our children to play sports. Moral strengths and failures among different cultures are particularly explored in this strongly worded work that barely grazes the tip of the iceberg BE, HOW WELL INTENTIONED ADULTS UNDERMINE CHILDRENS MORAL AND EMOTIONAL DEVELOPMENT http://www.amazon.com/Parents-Mean-Well-Intentioned-Undermine-Development/dp/0618626174/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1239469471&sr=1-1
Duke Faculty: Psychologist/psychiatrist with stsrong child development background (Tina will research)
Duke Faculty: Fuqua or other, perhaps in recruitment for Duke Grads who receives feedback on students as employees (Rosie and Naomi will research)
Confirmed Panel Speakers
Tina Lepage tlepage@lepageassociates.com (919) 572-0000 http://www.lepageassociates.com/html/tina.htmlModerator
Dean Blackburn, Assistant Dean of Students, UNC blackbrn@email.unc.edu (919) 966 4042Speakers
UNC Dean of Student Office : http://deanofstudents.unc.edu/index.php/for-faculty-topmenu-77.html
The Office of the Dean of Students works to educate the entire University community, including faculty and staff, about relevant policies and ways of responding to student-related matters, and serves as an initial point of reference for students who have concerns about issues concerning their campus experience.
Through a wide variety of educational programs, the supervision of campus functions such as the Office of Fraternity and Sorority Life and the Student Judicial System, and enforcement of University policies such as the Policy on Prohibited Harassment and Discrimination and the Student Alcohol Policy, we promote a positive learning environment in which all students may achieve their full academic and personal potential
Coach Anson Dorrance, Women's Soccer Coach, UNC **//anson@uncaa.unc.edu//** 919-962-4100 (w); 919-616-5679 (c) http://tarheelblue.cstv.com/sports/w-soccer/mtt/dorrance_anson00.html
PANEL MEMBERS UNDER CONSIDERATION
Recommendations:Ellen Gooding, CA Counselor--Wendy Mogel author of The Blessings of a Skinned Knee (This author spoke to a sold out crowd in Seattle a couple of years ago, her fee then was $20K) May be a good book to have available that evening though.
Wendy Mogel http://www.wendymogel.com/schedule/item/seattle_wa/ Speaking in Seattle again--Keynote, tickets are $25-30. Let me know if you want me to continue to follow up-assume she's too expensive for a panel member. RB
Don Berger and Laura Sellers, CA Head and CA College Counselor--Duke's Dean Sue Wasiolek--co author of book "Getting the Most out of College" http://deanofstudents.studentaffairs.duke.edu/our_staff/profiles/sue.html Dean Sue is doesn't have a psychology, child development background--she would fit better into the role Dean Blackburn is already filling, IMO. RB
Mitch McGuigan, CA US Head, Dr. Rob Evans--psychologist/author who has spoke at CA approximately 7 years ago http://www.ncais.org/event_info/Rob%20Evans%20Bio.pdf 4/8/09 Checked out his website, he has a conflict for October 27th, RB
Dr. David Elkind, Tufts Unversity, Professor Emeritus, Child Development http://ase.tufts.edu/faculty-guide/fac/delkind.childdev.htm, quoted extensively in Psychology Today article "A Nation of Wimps" 4/8/09 His background is excellent on this topic. He is available on the 27th, $2500, amount includes travel and expenses.
Dr. David Anderegg, also studied Child Development at Tufts http://www.drdavidanderegg.com/page.php?PageID=484&PageName=Welcome%2FSite+Map also quoted extensively in Pyschology Today article "A Nation of Wimps" , authored 2 books. Senty inquiry e-mail RB
Dr. Karen C Wells, Duke University, Director Family Studies Clinic
Clinical Interests:Marital therapy, couples therapy, general family therapy, family therapy for parent-adolescent problems, parent training for parents of children with disruptive behavior disorders. http://www.dukehealth.org/physicians/0542B2EB1FFD4A6B85256DFD006A90DE
Dr. John Looney (MD), Duke University, Former chair of the Division of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, now in private practice in Cary. : Assessment and treatment of emotional disorders in childDr. Looney has also developed an innovative approach to dealing with the problem of binge drinking by college students. He leads teams of consultants to campuses to design methods of institutional cultural shift from laissez faire administration of student affairs to more active involvement in student life by college and university faculty and administrators. Dr. Looney's work with colleges and universities is supported by a permanent endowment from the Cotswold Foundation of Philadelphia, PA.ren, adolescents and their families. Family therapy and guidance of parents. Evaluation and treatment of substance abuse in adolescents and young adults. Psychotherapy and consultation to college students. Consultation: Organizational consultation with regard to building clinical systems. Consultation to secondary schools and colleges regarding methods of reducing excessive use of alcohol and other drugs and managing student mental health issues. Limited consultation to legal professionals. http://psychiatry.mc.duke.edu/Faculty/JLooney.html (asked Tina if she had a contact with him 4/11)
Dr. Richard Weissbourd, Harvard lecturer on Education http://www.gse.harvard.edu/faculty_research/profiles/profile.shtml?vperson_id=197New book out THE PARENTS WE MEAN TO From Publishers Weekly
Harvard psychologist Weissbourd (The Vulnerable Child) delivers a direct, digestible wakeup call about the need for better moral instruction for children. Enlisting a battery of researchers to conduct interviews with students, teachers and parents mostly in the Boston area and the South, Weissbourd asserts quite forcefully and repetitively that by abdicating moral authority to popular culture and children's peers, by shielding children from their destructive behavior, by letting fathers off the hook and by insisting on children's happiness rather than their goodness, adults are failing their own children. Weissbourd looks at the role of shame in engendering children's destructive acts, and how it can result from parents' excessive expectations and fears of their children's emotions. Promoting an elusive notion of happiness sacrifices important lessons in empathy, appreciation and caring, while parents' self-interest continually erodes the basis for community. The author advocates checking parents' overweening drive for achievement in our children, refraining from wanting to be their best friend and cultivating a healthy idealism. He cites a woeful lack of self-awareness by parents and the need for building alliances with teachers and other parents. His chapter on the morally mature sports parent is a sober reminder of why we want our children to play sports. Moral strengths and failures among different cultures are particularly explored in this strongly worded work that barely grazes the tip of the iceberg BE, HOW WELL INTENTIONED ADULTS UNDERMINE CHILDRENS MORAL AND EMOTIONAL DEVELOPMENT http://www.amazon.com/Parents-Mean-Well-Intentioned-Undermine-Development/dp/0618626174/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1239469471&sr=1-1
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Duke Faculty: Psychologist/psychiatrist with stsrong child development background (Tina will research)
Duke Faculty: Fuqua or other, perhaps in recruitment for Duke Grads who receives feedback on students as employees (Rosie and Naomi will research)